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Nineth Annuall Hemingway Contest (Galella) |
Ray Bradbury is one of
those rare individuals whose writing has a revolutionary effect on his readers'
minds. Once read, his words are never forgotten. Even though it was not my
first time to read a fiction book; the experience I felt when reading
Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 was unique and surprisingly exciting. The book
tells a story about an imaginary period in the future where books are banned
and firemen are hired to burn them. The main theme of the book was about the
possible effects of the banning/censorship of literary items on people and how
it would contribute to a corrupt society. However, now that I am writing in
2016, I think that the most astonishing thing in Fahrenheit 451 was
Bradbury's accurate predictions of our own present in the age of technology.
In terms of
technology, Sam Weller notes that Bradbury "predicted everything from
flat-panel televisions to iPod earbuds and twenty-four-hour banking
machines." (Gutenberg) This appeared in his vivid illustration of the
small radio tele-communicators, called seashells, which allowed for people to
listen to shows, music and podcasts, in his description of a 4-wall large TV
"Parlor" where people spend their lives just watching interactive
shows and through many other descriptions and examples. The most significant
invention Bradbury predicted, however, was the artificially-intelligent robot
that can take over other living-organisms' traits. The Mechanical Hound was a
revolutionary device predicted by Bradbury who could sense and make decisions
accordingly without the need for any human intervention. Interestingly enough,
we can relate The Mechanical Hound to The Automaton we came across earlier in
this course in Hugo. The automaton resembled the fear of surrounding
one-self with technology and machines in every aspect of life, which appeared
in Hugo's dream of turning to the automaton himself; while the hound
represented the fear of the fault of technology along with the paranoia Montag
experienced for hiding books in his ventilator and fearing he would get caught.
That fear of the fault in technology is a feeling we get every day in 2016 due
to the fact that some inventions actually proved to be of more harm to
consumers than they do any good. From that, we can see another prediction in Fahrenheit
451, the effect of the evolution of information-sharing media. For
example, when Mildred's friends were at their house, they were talking about a
"five-minute romance", which reflects on how the most deeply
emotionally-engaging genre has become as condensed as 5 minutes in the new
medium of television. In our age, it is even worse; you can see online videos
talking about "a compilation of..." anything without any depth,
analysis or engagement; they just state what there is as it is and create a
catchy title to attract viewers. Faber, one of the main characters in the book,
also talks about how the value in books is in the information itself rather
than the covers and highlights that the problem is that it is not transferred
through the new medium of television. Right now, the same problem actually
arises with the medium of the internet in how it does not reliably communicate
the valuable data as we concluded in our final essays.
In the age
where all these inventions are available, people were having a lot of
corruptions in their behaviors in the settings of Fahrenheit 451 similar
to what we experience nowadays. People were more of technically living,
but not actually living their lives to the fullest; they were missing on a lot
of things any civilized society may have. The introduction of the parlor walls
(TV) has provided them with the virtual reality they may live in. They allowed
that new medium to shape their lives and isolate them from the real purposes of
life. In Fahrenheit 451, people used these technologies to hide behind
from their fears and confrontations; we saw Faber's cowardice to confronting
the world with his views and how he hid his talks with Montag inside his modded
seashell. We live in the same reality right now with slight differences; we
restricted our main daily activities to our phones, TVs, laptops and gaming
consoles, we began to lose the real touch of arguing, talking and presenting
views with each other, we use our gadgets as a shelter from confronting real
people and opposite views. We are in-deliberately becoming more passive to our
decisions in life and are basing our futures on how things look and how popular
they are. Interestingly enough, this was also another prediction Bradbury made
in his novel; we saw how Mildred's friends were talking about how they would
never vote to a certain presidential candidate, because the other one looked
better... without regard to any offered policies, plans or views. Rings a bell?
Speaking
about policies, it was easy to point out some policies adopted by governments
in Fahrenheit 451 that perfectly suit our governments' actions nowadays.
Firstly, we saw how Montag mentioned that nobody wants to talk about war,
because they are not directly affected by it and they don't care. In analogy
with that, we can see developed countries ignoring crises happening in the
third world, because it doesn't affect them and even if they interfered, it
would be for their own selfish sake; they would exploit the situation to
extract the resources from that country. Another thing that appears to be
dominant in today's world is how the advertisements in Fahrenheit 451
were too frequent and intrusive to the extent that it kept people away from
thinking; Denham's Dentifrice ad made it very hard for Montag to read more than
one sentence from the bible while he was on the train. This is analogous to
modern-day media platforms that are mainly manipulated by governments to
present misleading information/ invaluable content to brainwash and distract
the public from the real problems. Last but not least, we were able to see the
brutality and the lack of values, morals and empathy towards innocent citizens
residing in the city during the war. Such brutality can only come from ruthless
sadistic people who can murder kids, women and elderly just for the personal
benefits gained in return. Whenever I remember this, I can only see Dr. Iman's
face when she teared in class about the Aleppo attacks; we have come too far in
this that our lust for power dominates over our sense of value to other
people's lives. Bradbury once described himself as "a preventor of
futures, not a predictor of them." (Gutenberg) Yet still, we see these
brutal actions every day in every region in the world; it was predicted before,
we were warned against that... But do we even read?!
Such state in
our world has made the unique contrast between Mildred and Clarisse a reality;
you can easily see depressed people who intentionally keep themselves in the
dark about things while you may come across others who are cheerful, civilized
and well informed. You can also reflect to the distinction between Faber's and
Beatty's personality; two people who know equally enough knowledge and value,
but one of them appreciates it and the other one despises it. This has been a
consequence to the fact that we no longer know enough true knowledge, media is
being manipulated for personal benefits and our lifestyles have become sedated
and dull-routinized by some preset systems.
In the book,
we see many occurrences where books are referred to as mirrors to one-self's
past, memories or views, but the only way I can look at them right now is how
they may be a mirror to the future of mankind. After all, books contain our
minds and our minds are the main shapers of the future. "The magic is in
what books say, how they stitched the patches of the Universe together into one
garment for us.”
Works Cited
"Fahrenheit 451." Project
Gutenberg Self-Publishing. World Heritage Encyclopedia, Web, http://self.gutenberg.org/articles/eng/Fahrenheit_451.
Accessed 12 Dec. 2016.
Galella, Ron. “Author Ray Bradbury
attends Nineth Annual Hemingway Contest on March 10, 1986 at Harry's Bar and
Grill in Century City, California.” Getty Images. 1 Jan. 2010, http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/author-ray-bradbury-attends-nineth-annual-hemingway-contest-news-photo/103543840#author-ray-bradbury-attends-nineth-annual-hemingway-contest-on-march-picture-id103543840.
Accessed 12 Dec. 2016. Image.
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